A system and method for a load-facing winch are described for hauling or lifting loads at least 30° from center of the primary support object. The load-facing winch includes a winch-mount that includes a housing, a center-pivot, a mounting-plate, and a plurality of springs. The mounting-plate is attached to the winch and tilts and/or turns about the center-pivot, which allows the winch to face the load. By directing the winch to face the load, angular resistance against a moving fairlead may be reduced.
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1. A winch comprising:
a motor;
a rotatable drum for winding a line;
wherein the rotatable drum is connected to the motor;
a winch-line-guide for positioning the line during winding, comprising:
an elongated rod extending longitudinally within a frame for the rotatable drum and in substantially parallel relation to the axis of rotation of the drum,
a fairlead through which the line penetrates,
wherein the fairlead is connected to the rod, and
wherein the fairlead is movable along the length of the rod;
a winch-mount comprising:
a housing;
wherein the housing is attached to a primary support object;
a center-pivot;
wherein the center-pivot is attached to the housing;
wherein the axis of rotation of the center-pivot is perpendicular to the axis of rotation of the drum, and the axis of rotation of the center-pivot passes through the drum;
a mounting-plate to which the rotatable drum is attached;
wherein the mounting-plate is rotatably connected to the center-pivot;
a plurality of springs each attached at one end to the housing and at the other end to the mounting-plate for biasing rotation of the mounting plate about the center-pivot; and
wherein, when the fairlead is unable to move along the length of the guide rod due to a force of a load working against a movement direction of the fairlead, the winch and mounting plate rotate about the center-pivot such that the force of the load is relieved, and the fairlead is able to move along the length of the guide rod.
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The present disclosure relates generally to the field of motorized winches. More specifically, the present disclosure relates to a winch support structure.
Winches are hauling or lifting devices, which pull in or let out a line. Winches function by winding or unwinding the line that is coiled around a horizontal rotating drum. When a winch is motorized, a winch-line-guide is commonly used to direct the line along the drum as it winds or unwinds. Typically, the winch is mounted to a primary support object to provide stability for the winch as it hauls or lifts a load. When the primary support object is not directly facing the load, the tension from the load can disrupt and in some cases overpower the movement of the fairlead as it attempts to guide the line during winding. Thus, one problem that is frequently encountered is how to guide the line along the drum when the primary support object does not or is unable to directly face the load. Embodiments and methods disclosed herein may improve performance of winches when hauling or lifting indirect loads.
Disclosed herein is a winch, comprising a winch-mount, which may overcome the limitation of existing winches. In one embodiment, a winch comprises a winch-mount, wherein the winch-mount allows the winch to turn and/or tilt about a pivot to face the direction of a load. When the winch is not in use, the winch may be directed by the winch-mount to return to a natural resting position in relation to a primary support object to which the winch is connected.
Also disclosed herein is a method to reduce angular resistance on a winch that is created by an indirect load. The method includes directing the position of the winch such that a fairlead of a winch-line-guide faces the load.
The written disclosure herein describes illustrative embodiments that are non-limiting and non-exhaustive. Reference is made to certain of such illustrative embodiments that are depicted in the figures, in which:
In the following detailed description, numerous specific details are provided for a thorough understanding of the various embodiments disclosed herein. The embodiments disclosed herein can be manufactured without one or more of the specific details, or with other methods, components, materials, etc. In addition, in some cases, well-known structures, or characteristics may be combined in any suitable manner in one or more alternative embodiments.
Motorized winches may include a winch-line-guide that directs the line to wind along the length of the rotatable drum to avoid bunching or catching of the line on the rotatable drum. In one embodiment, a motor powers the drum to rotate about an axis within a frame. A fairlead of the winch-line-guide is connected to and simultaneously moves along the length of one or more elongated rods, which extend longitudinally within the frame in substantially parallel relation to the drum axis.
As the fairlead moves along the rods, the line passes through the fairlead such that the fairlead directs the line to wind uniformly around the drum. The fairlead may, at times, be unable to move along the drum length due to the force of the load working against the movement direction of the fairlead. A winch-mount that changes the direction of the drum and fairlead face may resolve this problem and allow the fairlead to smoothly move along the length of the drum.
In one embodiment winch-mount may include a housing with a center-pivot located in the middle of the housing. The housing may include one or more latches, clamps, and/or other securement mechanisms for securing the housing to the primary support object.
The center-pivot may protrude from the interior of the housing, according to one embodiment, and extend through a center-hole in the middle of a mounting-plate. In one embodiment the tip of the center-pivot may be wider than both the shaft of the center-pivot protrusion and the center-hole of the mounting-plate through which the shaft extends. Embodiments of the tip of the center-pivot may form a sphere, plate, rhombus, polyhedron, bowl-shape and/or other suitable shape.
In one embodiment, the mounting-plate may oscillate, rotate, balance, pivot, turn, tilt, teeter, vacillate, hover, hang, sway, and/or dither. The mounting-plate may be connected to the rotatable drum in one embodiment. The winch may include one or more spacers, insertions, and/or attachments between the rotatable drum and the mounting-plate. Some embodiments of the mounting-plate may include one or more protrusions, attachments, flanges, extensions, shelves, depressions, grooves and/or other surface discontinuities that interact with the springs. The mounting-plate may also include materials with a stronger composition than the resistance applied by the springs. In one embodiment, the mounting-plate may include one or more folds, bends, creases, and/or curvatures such that the degree to which the rotatable drum tilts is as much as 180° from rest. The mounting-plate may also rotate as much as 360° around the center pivot, according to one embodiment.
A plurality of springs may direct the degree to which the mounting-plate may tilt and/or turn within the housing. One or more springs of the winch-mount are arranged parallel, perpendicular, and/or diagonal to the mounting-plate. The springs may be attached directly to the housing and/or mounting-plate, according to one embodiment, or the springs may be attached to one or more securement brackets. In one embodiment, securement brackets may extend from the housing and/or mounting-plate. The winch-mount may include one or more compression springs, variable springs, coil springs, flat springs, serpentine springs, cantilever springs, coil springs, volute springs, wave spring, and/or any spring belonging to another spring classification that absorbs movement. One or more springs of the winch-mount may be comprised of steel alloys, carbon steel, ferrous metals, stainless steels, exotic alloys such as Elgiloy, Inconel X-750, and A286 alloy, non-ferrous metals, oil tempered spring wire, and/or any other material suitable to absorb movement. In one embodiment, the springs may have less compressional resistance than the force exerted to move the fairlead. One ore more of the springs may include one or more lubricants to facilitate spring movement, according to one embodiment.
The housing 220 may include one or more horizontal-springs 334 transverse to the center-pivot 216 that are attached to a spring-securement bracket 336 that extends from the housing 220. The mounting-plate 218 may include one or more protrusions 338 that interact with the horizontal-springs 334. In addition to the horizontal-springs 334, the housing 220 may also include vertical-springs 340 that extend downward from the housing 220. One or more knobs 342 may be positioned on the mounting-plate 218 so as to interact with the vertical-springs 340.
Hall, David R., Fox, Joe, Madsen, Daniel, Taylor, Benjamin, Wilson, Lloyd J.
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Executed on | Assignor | Assignee | Conveyance | Frame | Reel | Doc |
Sep 30 2016 | Hall Labs LLC | (assignment on the face of the patent) | / | |||
Aug 11 2018 | FOX, JOE | Hall Labs LLC | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 047157 | /0931 | |
Sep 11 2018 | HALL, DAVID R | Hall Labs LLC | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 047058 | /0053 | |
Dec 05 2018 | TAYLOR, BENJAMIN | Hall Labs, LLC | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 047758 | /0331 | |
Dec 07 2018 | MADSEN, DANIEL | Hall Labs LLC | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 047707 | /0052 | |
Jun 22 2022 | FOX, JOE | Hall Labs LLC | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 060392 | /0783 |
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